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The Bristol Crown Court is a Crown Court venue which deals with criminal cases at Small Street in Bristol, England.The building, which was completed in 1868, was previously used as a main post office before it was converted for judicial use in the early 1990s.
Christina Howell, 37, of Easton, admitted manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility at a hearing a Bristol Crown Court on Friday after originally entering a not guilty plea in November 2024.
The trial of 41-year-old Darren Osment began on 16 October 2023 at Bristol Crown Court. [19] The trial heard that on a night out in Devon, Osment, a former partner of Holland, had dialed 999 and confessed to the operator that he had murdered Holland and said that he was "handing himself in." [20] [21] When police officers arrived Osment claimed that he "didn't do it, but had it arranged."
R v Rhian Graham, Milo Ponsford, Jake Skuse and Sage Willoughby, known as the Colston four, was a British court case surrounding the toppling of the statue of Edward Colston, involving four defendants accused of criminal damage in relation to the removal and dumping in the harbour of the controversial statue in Bristol in 2020 during a protest.
Bristol Crown Court heard Mr Moncrieff had stepped into a row between the defendant and another boy in the early hours of May 6 and was invited to “come around the corner” where he was stabbed.
The pair were attacked shortly after leaving Mason’s home on Ilminster Avenue, Bristol Crown Court heard. Antony Snook, 45, was found guilty of murdering the boys (Avon and Somerset Police/PA Wire)
In late June 1967, 75-year-old Louisa Dunne (b. 1891 or 1892) was murdered in her home in Bristol, England. [1] Having gone unsolved for 57 years, it is the oldest cold case in the history of Avon and Somerset Police .
In 2007, there were 91 locations in England and Wales at which the Crown Court regularly sat. [4] Crown Court centres are designated in one of three tiers: first-tier centres are visited by High Court judges for criminal and also for civil cases (in the District Registry of the High Court); second-tier centres are visited by High Court judges for criminal work only; and third-tier centres are ...